Tuesday, May 16, 2017

fidget spinners .....another shite invention .......

Well only in America ......can you sell an absurd item that's completely fucking stupid and useless .......a fidget spinner....yep its projected that 500 million bucks worth of these inanimate shite plastic inventions are going to be sold to mindless fucking mall ratesque fuck wits ..........why........ because they do not know what to do ...........with themselves .......Here a revelation ........ why don't you do some volunteer work ...........or maybe donate time to a place that needs help ......rather than fidget like a little fucking bitch that you are ..........oh no !!!!!!!i need to be sheep minded and get fucked out of money ..........by probably bowel of rice mother fuckers .......how much weed does one smoke to invent this dumb fucking shit .......but empty minded millennials ......and x gen pansies will scoff this shit ......... up and walk about being all fashinista ....they should go well with manicured beards tight pants ......... and Wyatt erp haircuts ......... Lets face it ..........of you are going to be a cunt ......you may as well go the whole enchilada ..........right .... ....girls will think your cool spinning this dumb fucking tool ......fidget ........ really .........there is always a cure for fidgeting .....and a good kick in the nuts .........

International Business Times

Do Fidget Spinners Actually Help You Feel Less Anxious, More Focused?

If you know a teen, or are one, you’ve probably heard of the latest toy trend: fidget spinners. The small handheld toys are making their way onto social media and into the hands of kids, teens and even adults looking to destress. The toys are simple and small. They feature center bearings that have prongs sticking out that easily spin.

The fidget spinners are marketed as toys that can reduce anxiety and help reduce symptoms of attention disorders and even autism. Descriptions of the toys online say they can help keep fidgety kids keep busy and reduce behaviors like nail biting, leg shaking or other attention challenges.

The fidget toys aren’t the first to promote this kind of a solution, think of stress balls or even students who knit during college lectures to keep their hands busy or to focus.

“There is evidence to suggest that children with attentional challenges showed improved concentration when they are allowed to move,” Nowinski said. While the fidget spinners making the rounds now haven’t been studied, other tools used in classroom settings have been shown to help students. But as with most approaches to improving attention or learning, nothing is a one size fits all solution.

Nowinski also emphasized the importance of an individual approach. “It is important to understand the unique learning needs of each child in a classroom in order to determine what supports may actually facilitate their learning and participation,” she said.

So fidget spinners may help some people focus or feel less anxiety but they’re just one tool that can be used. The goal with using one of these fidget tools or materials is to help the fidgety person adjust or adapt their behavior, Bridgemohan said.

“The whole approach of treating certain kinds of behavior that often occur in kids that are anxious, like nail biting and other kinds of habits, is really based on structured behavior principles of replacing a behavior,” Bridgemohan said. “So you use cognitive strategies to recognize when you’re doing the behavior and try to use other ways to calm or cope and not do the behavior.”

Essentially the goal is to replace an unacceptable behavior that can disrupt others, like pen clicking, nail biting or even throat clearing, with a more acceptable one that doesn’t cause any disruption.

But the devices need to be used for anxiety and focusing carefully. If using one of these tools helps someone feel less anxious or helps them focus without distracting others, Bridgemohan said she sees no need for that person to see a specialist. But if a child is having a hard time functioning in school, working with a school specialist to figure out why the child is struggling and how to address it is the best move.

“There’s no one fidget that is necessary or required for anybody,” Bridgemohan said. “So I think when things cost money there’s always things that could be adapted that are much lower cost, or no cost, and that’s where working with the school team, perhaps their occupational therapist or other specialist could be appropriate.”